KHRC: D’Amato Trainee Disqualified From Grade 1 Turf Classic Placing Over NSAID Finding

A Kentucky Horse Racing Commission ruling dated Aug. 26, 2023, has officially disqualified Phil D'Amato-trained Hong Kong Harry from his second-place finish in the Grade 1 Turf Classic on the Kentucky Derby undercard on May 6 due to a post-race finding of the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory mofebutazone.

According to an advisory from the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium dated May 19, 2023, mofebutazone is an analogue of phenylbutazone exhibiting a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory (NSAID) mechanism of action.  Mofebutazone does not have FDA approval for use in any species.

(As it lacks FDA approval, mofebutazone would be classified as a Banned Substance by HISA's Anti-Doping and Medication Control (ADMC) regulations, which launched on May 22, 2023. Thus, had the drug been found in Hong Kong Harry after May 22, D'Amato would be subject to up to a two-year suspension and a $25,000 fine.)

Since the infraction occurred prior to the implementation of HISA's ADMC program, it was adjudicated under the pre-existing regulations of the KHRC. After waiving their rights to a formal hearing, D'Amato will pay a $1,000 fine, and the owners Scott Anastasi, Jimmy Ukegawa, and Tony Valazza must forfeit $194,000 in earnings.

The full ruling is available here.

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Colonial Downs Adjusts Thursday Post Time To 1:25 P.M.

After reviewing the racing landscape for this coming Thursday, Sept. 7, officials at Colonial Downs have decided to modify its first post time for that day to 1:25 p.m. to better coordinate with other racetracks running that day.

Live racing this week – the final week of the 27-day day meet – begins with a special card on Wednesday, September 6 to make up for a program lost earlier in the season. The 10-race card, which starts at the standard 1:30 p.m., features a $12,055 carryover into the 50-cent Early Pick 4 (races 1-5) with a low 12% takeout.

Saturday's closing day card is highlighted by the Grade 3 $500,000 New Kent County Virginia Derby as well as five additional stakes topped by the $250,000 Virginia Oaks.

About Colonial Downs

Colonial Downs Racetrack, in New Kent, Virginia, hosts live thoroughbred racing on two nationally renowned surfaces – the Secretariat Turf Course, the widest turf course in North America at 180 feet wide and on a 1 1/4-mile dirt track, second in length to only the world-famous Belmont Park. The Colonial Downs Group, which is owned by Churchill Downs Incorporated (NASDAQ Global Select Market: CHDN), also operates Rosie's Gaming Emporiums® in Richmond, Hampton, New Kent, Vinton, and Dumfries which offer innovative historic horseracing (HHR) gaming technology and full card simulcasting as well as Rosie's Game Room in Collinsville, which features a limited selection of some of their best HHR titles plus full card simulcasting. The 2023 live racing season, which consists of 27 days from July 13 through September 9, is highlighted by the Grade 1 Arlington Million, Grade 1 Beverly D. and Grade 2 Secretariat Stakes on August 12 and the Grade 3 New Kent County Virginia Derby on September 9. The Beverly D. is a Breeders' Cup Challenge “Win & You're In” race.

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Economic Indicators: Saratoga Wagering Dip Leads To National Handle Decline Of 7.30 Percent

A nine percent decrease in total handle at Saratoga Race Course this summer led to a total U.S. wagering decline of 7.30 percent in August of 2023, compared to the same month in 2022, according to statistics released Tuesday by Equibase. Year-to-date figures show a wagering decline of 4.09 percent in 2023.

Among the reasons for Saratoga's handle decline were unprecedented levels of rain, which forced 65 races off the turf course (compared to 16 races taken off the turf in 2022), and a spate of seven catastrophic breakdowns during the meet.

NYRA President and CEO Dave O'Rourke promised the following enhancements to improve racehorse safety: “In the coming months, NYRA will make significant investments in PET scan imaging to identify pre-existing injuries; finalize the path forward regarding the adoption of synthetic surfaces at each venue; and expand the use of biometric wearable devices. Horses, fans, and the racing community deserve nothing less.”

Across the rest of the country, with numerous cancellations due to extremely hot weather, race days in August were down 6.41 percent from the same month in 2022—409 days versus 437 days during the corresponding month last year. Year to date, the number of race days was down 4.47 percent.

Average field size actually showed a small increase in August, from 7.16 starters in 2023 compared to 7.13 in 2022. Year-to-date figures show field size up 1.64 percent, to an average of 7.30 starters.

Available U.S. purses in August resumed an increase following four straight months of decreases, up 1.88 percent to $132,745,643. Year-to-date figures also showed a slight uptick of 1.32 percent.

Average available purses per race day were up 12.62 percent in August. Similarly, year to date, average available purses per race day rose 10.00 percent.

August 2023 vs. August 2022
Indicator August 2023 August 2022 % Change
Wagering on U.S. Races* $1,107,146,014 $1,194,362,432 -7.30%
U.S. Purses (Available) $132,745,643 $130,293,668 +1.88%
U.S. Purses (Paid) $125,922,233 $125,935,965 -0.01%
U.S. Race Days 409 437 -6.41%
U.S. Races 3,204 3,400 -5.76%
U.S. Starts 22,925 24,228 -5.38%
Average Field Size 7.16 7.13 +0.41%
Average Wagering Per Race Day $2,706,958 $2,733,095 -0.96%
Average Available Purses Per Race Day $324,561 $288,183 +12.62%

YTD 2023 vs. YTD 2022
Indicator YTD 2023 YTD 2022 % Change
Wagering on U.S. Races* $8,249,313,338 $8,601,074,739 -4.09%
U.S. Purses (Available) $854,882,701 $843,731,568 +1.32%
U.S. Purses (Paid) $819,847,264 $813,549,148 +0.77%
U.S. Race Days 2,693 2,819 -4.47%
U.S. Races 21,934 22,805 -3.82%
U.S. Starts 160,102 163,766 -2.24%
Average Field Size 7.30 7.18 +1.64%
Average Wagering Per Race Day $3,063,243 $3,051,108 +0.40%
Average Available Purses Per Race Day $317,446 $288,595 +10.00%

* Includes worldwide commingled wagering on U.S. races.

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‘Big, Robust Filly’ Playlist Takes On The Boys In Saturday’s Franklin-Simpson Stakes

Saturday's seventh running of the Grade 2, $1 million The Exacta Systems Franklin-Simpson Stakes at the FanDuel Meet at Kentucky Downs is an equine battle of the sexes.

However, trainer Wesley Ward, whose filly Playlist is taking on eleven 3-year-old colts in the 6 1/2 furlong sprint, doesn't think it's that big of a deal. Ward, who has had plenty of success running fillies against the colts, didn't spend sleepless nights agonizing over whether this was the right thing to do.

“I like to run fillies against colts in sprints,” Ward said by phone. “I don't think it makes a big difference. If you look at the times in the 2-year-olds in training sales, the fillies are always faster as a group. I think they can compete against the colts every time.”

Ward has enjoyed Kentucky Downs success when running fillies vs. colts in the past. He won the first two runnings of the $500,000 Juvenile Turf Sprint Stakes by beating the boys with Moonlight Romance in 2018 and Cambria in 2019.

Before entering Playlist in the Franklin-Simpson, Ward had his eyes on the Grade 3, $1 million Big Ass Fans Music City, which was run last Saturday. He did not get in.

Plan B was to run against the boys, even though the horse had to be supplemented for $30,000.

“The filly is training outstanding,” Ward said. “She is a big, robust filly, she looks like a colt. As well as she is training, I just thought she really needed to run for the money. I have won a lot of races vs colts, so I thought this would be a filly that could possibly do it.”

Playlist, a daughter of Uncle Mo, is owned by the Coolmore partnership of Westerberg, Susan Magnier, Jonathan Poulin, Derrick Smith and Michael Tabor. She started her career slow and has blossomed as a 3-year-old.

She has gone to the races four times this year and has won three, the last two being most impressive, if you ask Ward.

Playlist was purchased for $400,000 at the 2021 Keeneland September Yearling Sale, and Ward always had high hopes for her. She broke her maiden at Turfway on Feb. 18 by a half-length but it didn't move the meter for the trainer. He called Dermont Ryan, the manager of Coolmore America, and advised giving Playlist some time off.

The R&R perked her up and she came back and posted two sparkling wins: an allowance at Ellis Park on June 15 by 5 ½ lengths (at odds of nearly 20-1!) and another allowance a month later at Saratoga by three-quarters of a length.

Ward was in England at Royal Ascot when Playlist won at Ellis.

“I just could not believe those odds,” he said. “I realized what I thought of her, but if you looked at the paper on her (one win in four starts and a long layoff line), her odds were right. If I was a gambling man – and I don't bet – I would have been betting with both hands. She ran like I always thought she could.”

This will be Playlist's first start at Kentucky Downs. She has run at five different tracks – Saratoga (twice), Ellis, Turfway, Santa Anita and Del Mar — in her six starts.

“She is well-traveled,” Ward said. “Being to many places always helps. You never know, but she is fast.”

Hall of Famer John Velazquez will ride Playlist in the Franklin-Simpson and Ward is expecting to see something special.

“She duplicated the (Ellis race) at Saratoga,” Ward said. “I think she is going to run much better than she has in those races. Looking at the competition, in my mind, she will be very, very tough to beat.”

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